
Nasogastric tube-related pressure injuries were more common on the internal medicine ward than in the ICU
AI-summarized from the linked source. Educational brief, not medical advice.
Brief summary
In a prospective cohort at one 900-bed center, nasogastric tube-related pressure injuries were significantly more frequent on the internal medicine ward than in the ICU, an unexpected reversal the authors link to comorbidity burden, staffing ratios, and tube-fixation technique.
What NurseJet pulled from the source
This prospective cohort study followed adults who had a nasogastric tube placed during or within four hours before admission to the ICU (88 patients) or internal medicine ward (48 patients) of a 900-bed medical center, monitoring daily for tube-related pressure injuries from July 2022 to July 2024. Contrary to the expectation that sicker ICU patients would fare worse, incidence was significantly lower in the ICU (4 patients; 0.47 per 100 patient-days) than on the internal medicine ward (13 patients; 3.02 per 100 patient-days; P < .001). Internal medicine ward patients had a higher Charlson Comorbidity Index (mean 7.7 vs 3.0; P = .02), and nasogastric tube fixation methods differed between the departments. The authors name comorbidity burden, nurse-to-patient ratios, and fixation technique as possible contributors that warrant further study.
Why this matters for nurses
Medical device-related pressure injuries from nasogastric tubes are painful, largely preventable, and easy to overlook under the tape. This study may matter for nurses because it challenges the assumption that these injuries cluster in the ICU, pointing instead to comorbidity, staffing, and fixation technique as drivers that apply on any ward.
Bedside takeaway
Worth knowing that nasogastric tube-related pressure injuries were more common on the internal medicine ward than in the ICU (3.02 vs 0.47 per 100 patient-days), pointing to comorbidity, staffing, and tube fixation as drivers.
Explain this for my unit
Key takeaways
- Nasogastric tube-related pressure injury incidence was significantly lower in the ICU (0.47 per 100 patient-days) than on the internal medicine ward (3.02 per 100 patient-days; P < .001).
- Four of 88 ICU patients versus 13 of 48 internal medicine ward patients developed a tube-related pressure injury.
- Internal medicine ward patients carried a higher comorbidity burden (Charlson index 7.7 vs 3.0; P = .02).
- Nasogastric tube fixation methods differed between the two departments and are a suspected contributor.
Practice implications
- For nurses on any unit with tube-fed patients, the findings reinforce routinely inspecting the skin under and around nasogastric tube fixation (nares and cheeks), rotating or adjusting securement to relieve pressure, and not assuming lower-acuity wards are low risk. Consistent, pressure-relieving fixation technique and regular skin checks may matter as much as patient acuity.
Limitations & cautions
- This was a single-center study with a small sample (88 ICU and 48 internal medicine ward patients), so the counterintuitive finding may not generalize, and the authors flag comorbidity burden, nurse-to-patient ratios, and fixation technique as confounders needing further investigation. Patients with pre-existing facial injuries or wounds were excluded, and the observational design cannot establish why incidence differed between departments.
- AI-summarized from the linked source. Review the original article before applying to practice.
Citations
Exact source links
Public citations are filtered to exact credible source pages. Homepage-only or invalid links stay in admin review and are not shown here.
American Journal of Critical Care (PubMed)
American Journal of Critical Care (PubMed). Incidence of Nasogastric Tube-Related Pressure Injuries in Intensive Care Unit and Internal Medicine Ward.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42380031/
Professional education only


